We qualify for some money from the town to help with our rent. The town said they would only give it to the landlord if he agreed to stop the eviction process. He said he would not accept it and he can't stop the eviction process unless we gave him full payment. Is he allowed to not accept our payment from the town?

A full payment can be refused, but only after the 3 days notice period of the eviction has started. You will still have to pay the rent, but as a court ordered judgment as part of the eviction. This way the landlord can get rid of you but still gets the rent.

If the landlord accepts this money, which he does not have to, it would automatically stop the eviction process, as it is "settled out of court". He does not have to specifically agree, just cashing the check is legal "agreement" in this case.

If your notice to pay or quit has expired (your landlord provided 3-10 day notice to pay up or get out, those days have passed, and now you have a court date), he doesn't have to accept anything from you, even full payment. Typically, in this situation, you would have to pay full backrent and fees owed, PLUS the cost of the eviction, since your landlord had to pay to file.

However, your landlord is perfectly within his rights to not accept anything from you, even full payment and damages, to continue with the eviction. He has no obligation to keep renting to someone who doesn't honor their financial obligations, regardless of your circumstances.

If your landlord has not yet filed for eviction (you are either still in your pay or quit timeframe, or he is only threatening eviction at this point), then he has to accept full payment. He doesn't have to accept anything less.

Never does a landlord have to accept payment from a third party, especially if your landlord has chosen not to participate in government programs. Even if you qualify for assistance, your landlord doesn't have to accept it.

Technically, he is not denying payment by the town, he is denying you the end of the eviction process.
That disqualifies you from the payment by the town.
He can refuse to not stop eviction procedure legally.
If you are a good tenant, that has merely hit a temporary problem, it behooves you to work as hard as possible with your landlord to get current. Provide him with a plan to do so, and ask for him to accept the town payment as well.

YepYou had a deal requiring you to pay rent IN FULL and ON TIMEYou didn't do it, regardless of your reasonsLL has a right to have good, responsible, regularly paying tenants in place--he has bills to pay tooLL figures he wants you out because you're behind in rent, and even getting onetime assistance from town, you'd still be behind, and he wants to have regular, timely rent paymentsIt's business, and makes financial sense for LL even if it's hard for you

If you dont give the entire amount, he can refuse to accept a partial payment from whoever is giving him money, so if you dont come up with the whole amount he can definitely go ahead with the eviction. You have an agreement to pay a specific rent amount and landlord depends on that to pay his bills.